Describe `z-index` and how stacking context is formed.
The z-index property in CSS controls the vertical stacking order of elements that overlap. z-index only affects positioned elements (elements which have a position value which is not static) and its descendants or flex items.
Without any z-index value, elements stack in the order that they appear in the DOM (the lowest one down at the same hierarchy level appears on top). Elements with non-static positioning (and their children) will always appear on top of elements with default static positioning, regardless of the HTML hierarchy.
A stacking context is an element that contains a set of layers. Within a local stacking context, the z-index values of its children are set relative to that element rather than to the document root. Layers outside of that context — i.e. sibling elements of a local stacking context — can't sit between layers within it. If an element B sits on top of element A, a child element of element A, element C, can never be higher than element B even if element C has a higher z-index than element B.
Each stacking context is self-contained — after the element's contents are stacked, the whole element is considered in the stacking order of the parent stacking context. A handful of CSS properties trigger a new stacking context, such as opacity less than 1, filter that is not none, and transform that is not none.
The full set of conditions that qualify an element to create a stacking context is listed in this long set of rules on MDN.